The televised
Reach for the Top series was first shown on
CBC Television affiliate
CBUT in
Vancouver,
British Columbia, in 1961. It was based on the
BBC program
Top of the Form. In that first year, a team from three high schools in
Burnaby, British ColumbiaFred Affleck, Robert French, Lynne Mader and Marilyn defeated every other team and took all the prizes. The first national
Reach for the Top tournament took place in 1965, and was won by
Vincent Massey Collegiate Institute from
Etobicoke, Ontario. The series was filmed at locations across Canada with the national championships held in
Montreal,
Quebec. In 1968, a joint effort by CBC and BBC led to the short-lived
Trans-World Top Team in which teams from the
United Kingdom played teams from Canada.
Alex Trebek hosted the Toronto version for several years, and was succeeded by
Jan Tennant in 1973. In Vancouver, the show was hosted by Terry Garner (1961–1982). For many years the Edmonton host was Colin MacLean. In
Windsor, the show was hosts were Don Daly and
Marty Adler. In
London, the show was hosted by Mark Lade, with judge Steve Officer. In Montreal, the show was hosted by Bob Cadman and by Marc Coté.
Shelagh Rogers, later a host for
CBC Radio, was a contestant on the original broadcasts of the show.
Bill Guest (Winnipeg) hosted the National Finals on CBC from 1969 to 1985. The CBC stopped airing
Reach for the Top in 1985, but the contest continues to be played under the aegis of Reach for the Top Inc.
CFPL-TV, the former CBC affiliate station in London, continued to air local competitions for several years, and hosted the provincial and national competitions. From 2000 to 2008, the national finals were aired by Canadian Learning Television (now
OWN: the Oprah Winfrey Network), hosted by Graham Neil of
CFRN-TV in Edmonton. In 2009, the national finals were not aired except for the final game, which was filmed in the
TVOntario studio. Until 2009, games at the provincial level were broadcast on stations unique to their respective provinces, among them
Ontario on TVO with
Nicole Stamp of
TVOKids (and produced and directed by
Sidney M. Cohen),
British Columbia with Tamara Stanners on
Knowledge, and
Alberta with Graham Neil on
Access. In 1985, Reach for the Top Inc., a private company, was established by
Sandy Stewart, with agreement from the CBC. Stewart then joined with his wife, Patricia Stewart, in partnership with
Robert Jeffrey and Paul Russell of Paulus Productions Inc. to create Schoolreach, an in-school version of
Reach for the Top available across Canada by subscription. Schoolreach is organized among the different school boards in Canada, and monthly tournaments are played, culminating in a district final each spring. The winner in each district participates in the provincial finals (which are televised in Ontario), and the provincial winner competes in the national championship. Reach for the Top Inc. produced a season of programming in Toronto in 1986 and 1987.
The Reach for the Top National Finals were revived in 1988. In 1995, Sandy and Pat Stewart retired from
Reach For The Top.
Reach for the Top and Schoolreach were then taken over by Paulus Productions Inc. under the direction of Paul Russell and Robert Jeffrey. CBC created a similar program,
SmartAsk, which aired for three seasons before being cancelled in 2004. From 1973 to 1997 the CBC's
French language network,
Radio-Canada, aired a program called
Génies en herbe ("Budding Geniuses"), which was the French language equivalent of
Reach for the Top. Competitions continued after the cancellation of the program, and teams from other
francophone countries around the world often participated. For the 1990-91 television season, Hamilton, Ontario's
CHCH channel 11 broadcast a regional version of
Reach for the Top hosted by broadcaster
Alan Cross. At the time, Cross was a DJ at
CFNY radio, but would later be well known as
musicologist and host of his own radio show
The Ongoing History of New Music. Since 2014, the national finals are uploaded to their official YouTube channel. ==Format==